Four more manufacturers flee to states with less-hostile business climates

Four Illinois manufacturers announced in October that they are leaving Illinois and relocating to bordering states to open up new plants facing less regulation.

These four manufacturers -- Merisat, an artificial
sweetener producer; Colbert Packaging Corp., a packaging products company; Altria, a
tobacco product maker; and Vonco Products, another packing products company -- are in the process of rebuilding their client bases through these new plants.

“Last year, six companies moved
out,” Michael Lucci, vice president of policy at the Illinois Policy Institute, told Illinois Rising.

The trend, happening especially in northeast Illinois, is extremely harmful to the entire state and to the workers at these plants. The plants are being relocated to states where regulations, taxes and financial burdens are lessened substantially. For example, Wisconsin "does not tax manufacturing income ... one
more advantage they have over Illinois from manufacturing businesses,” Lucci
said.

“From what I can see is there is a lot of regulation (in Illinois),"Al Popovich, owner of small manufacturer Accurate Design and
Fabrication, told Illinois Rising. “The cost here is just astronomical."

Popovich also said state government is to blame for the
closings of these manufacturers. The state does not give back to the companies
or invest in them, he said. With high insurance rates, extreme taxes and continuous
regulations, it is difficult for companies in Illinois to be successful and
employ many workers, he said.

Popovich does credit his local customers for his businesses’
success.

“A lot of our clients are local, and that helps us a lot,” Popovich
said. “If our clients moved, we would either have to move
with them or find new ones in the state, which would be very difficult.”

Many manufacturing
companies moving out of Illinois are moving to locations where a large client
base can be found, and where they can employ higher numbers of workers. Other issues the Illinois manufacturing sector is
facing are that “Nobody ever moves in to Illinois,” Lucci said, and employees
are not paid suitable wages.

When the state does not invest in good working conditions
and proper wages for employees, they flee and find other, better work. There is
also a rising trend in the lack of young men and women moving to Illinois to
find work, which makes it apparent either jobs in Illinois are slim or the
working conditions are below par.